Mon, March 3 Job Network Meeting at Johnson Ferry Baptist Church
Johnson Ferry Baptist Church Crossroads Career Ministry will host our monthly Network Meeting, March 3, 2008 from 7-9 pm. (3rd floor Loft A)
Please make plans to attend this event if you are actively looking for a job or considering a job change. Come learn cutting edge tips and techniques from Buck Trayser, a leading expert on Using the Internet to conduct an effective Job search. There will be opportunities for networking--You don'twant to miss this meeting! Resume reviews by professional recruiters begin at 6:15pm, prior to the meeting-we hope to see you there! No RSVP needed. For more information on Crossroads offerings, please contact us at 770 565-0854, ext. 3015 or crossroads@jfbc.org
Friday, February 29, 2008
Using the Internet to conduct a Job Search and Resume Review
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Elizabeth Coggins
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Labels: Events
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Thinking of you guys
I am so sorry to hear that there has been another round of layoffs at Wieland. I am thinking of all of you and know that you are probably struggling with stress and adjustment anxiety right this moment. I can promise you that things will get better. From talking with people who were let go in previous layoffs I hear that most are doing fine and pretty relieved that the "homebuilding crisis" is part of their past and not their future.
Your reactions will differ depending on how many layoffs/downsizings you have been through in your career. Overall going through the loss of a job is described as working through a grief process. This is certainly true for those of you who have invested many years in the company. Attending meetings of the jobs ministry at my church I heard a counselor say that " The size of the impact this event has on your life will be directly related to your perceptions of the size of the event". Basically, after the shock wears off, if you perceive it to be the end of the world it will have much greater impact on you than if you perceive it as a problem to be solved and go about solving it.
I have an excellent package of information from that particular workshop and will be happy to forward to anyone who emails me with a request. It is simply too large to post on the blog.
Those of us who have already gone through this are thinking of you and wish you all the best.
Please read back the older posts archived at the bottom of the blog. There is some good information re: an Outplacement firm, tax writeoffs for job seekers and Behavioral Interviewing. A lot of you will have to go through Behavioral Interview phone screens to get in the door for an interview and practicing through these questions will help.
Please contact me if I can be of any assistance. You are all bright, capable, motivated people and candidates like you are always in demand!! ALWAYS!
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Elizabeth Coggins
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6:36 PM
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Labels: General Wieland Information
Saturday, February 9, 2008
Avoid the Top Ten Resume Mistakes
Avoid the Top 10 Resume Mistakes
By AllBusiness.com
Most employers are deluged with Resumes from eager job seekers. Some human resource managers have hundreds of them sitting on their desks on any given day. With competition this fierce, the key to effective resume writing means being certain that yours is free of the common errors that many employers complain that they see made over and over again.
A strongly written resume can be the difference between landing an interview and landing in the "no" pile. Here are 10 common pitfalls to avoid when preparing your resume:
1. No clear focus. Your resume should show a clear match between your skills and experience and the job's requirements. A general resume with no sharp focus is not seen as competitive. Why are you the best person for this particular position?
2. Dutifully dull. A solid resume is much more than a summary of your professional experience; it's a tool to market yourself. Avoid phrases like "responsibilities included" or "duties included." Your resume should not be a laundry list of your duties but rather an announcement of your major accomplishments.
3. Poorly organized. Information on a resume should be listed in order of importance to the reader. Don't ask employers to wade through your hobbies first. Dates of employment are not as important as job titles. Education should be emphasized if you are freshly out of school and have little work experience; otherwise, put it at the end. If your resume is difficult to read or key information is buried, it's more likely to be cast aside.
4. Too much emphasis on old jobs. Resumes that go too far back into the job seeker's work history can put that person at risk for possible age discrimination. Does anyone really need to read about your high school job bagging groceries, especially if that was 20 years ago? The rule of thumb for someone at a senior level is to list about the last 15 years worth of professional experience.
5. Important skills buried. Don't forget to bullet the important skills that make you a standout in your field. Your objective is to play up the value that you will bring to a prospective employer. Emphasize how and what you will add worth to the company, not the reason you want the job. Employers are looking for someone to enhance the organization, not their own resume.
6. Drab looking. Try to stay away from the cookie-cutter resume templates that employers see constantly. Show a little imagination when writing and designing your resume. . But don't overdo it. Overly artistic or tiny fonts are a no-no, since they're hard to read and don't scan or photocopy well.
7. Too personal. If your Web site includes photos of your cat or your personal blog about what you did over the weekend, don't steer prospective employers there by including it on your resume. Keep your personal and your professional life separate in order to be taken seriously.
8. One typo too many. Your resume is your one chance to make a first impression. A typo or misspelled word can lead an employer to believe that you would not be a careful, detail-oriented employee. Spell-check software is not enough, since sentences like "Thank you for your patients" would get the thumbs up. Ask several people to proofread your resume to be sure that it is free of typos and grammatical errors.
9. Stretches the truth. Everyone wants to present his or her work experience in the most attractive light, but information contained on your resume must be true and accurate. Whether you're simply inflating past accomplishments or coming up with complete fabrications, lying is simply a bad idea. Aside from any moral or ethical implications, chances are that you'll eventually get caught and lose all credibility.
10. Skips the extras. A common mistake is neglecting to mention any extra education, training, volunteer work, awards, or recognitions that might pertain to your particular job area or industry. Many employers view such "extracurricular activities" as testament to a well-rounded employee, so leverage such things as assets to distinguish your resume from the hordes of others out there.
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Elizabeth Coggins
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9:13 AM
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Labels: Resume Information
Thursday, February 7, 2008
Good News for remaining company members!
But a new promotion offering price discounts up to $100,000 and a lifetime
structural warranty on Wieland houses produced 89 sales for the company between Jan. 25 and Feb. 3, twice the number of homes the company sold in the same period last year, according to Wieland officials.
That provided a welcome cash infusion of $50 million for the homebuilder, which is currently marketing 30 communities with more than 400 unsold homes around the metro area. And the surge in cash flow has recharged Wieland's confidence that his company can withstand the anemic sales expected to continue through the rest of 2008, Wieland said.
http://www.ajc.com/business/content/business/stories/2008/02/06/wieland_0207.html
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
at
2:49 PM
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Labels: General Wieland Information
Monday, February 4, 2008
IT, Estimator, CAD and Engineering jobs with Bechtel
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
at
9:09 PM
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Labels: job posting
Two openings - Executive Assistant and Paralegal
1. High Level EA for a consulting firm-heavy Excel-PowerPoint and scheduling-GREAT ORGANIZATION-Midtown
2. Paralegal-great organization skills -team player-great attitude-International Company-Marietta
These positions are ready to interview today. Please ask any referrals to contact me ASAP!
Thanks so much,
http://www.ajilonoffice.com/
Rebecca Payne
Executive Recruiter
Ajilon
The Pinnacle
3455 Peachtree Road NE
Suite 110
Atlanta, Ga 30326
tel.404-264-0001 x 302
fax.404-261-5566
rebecca.payne@ajilon.com
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Elizabeth Coggins
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7:32 PM
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Labels: job posting
Sunday, February 3, 2008
Several job search events for February
Transfiguration Catholic Church CareerCare Ministry Schedule February 2008
SCHEDULE OF UPCOMING EVENTS
Monday Nights 7:00 to 9:00 PM Areas Covered: Spiritual Support, Attendee Introductions, Job Leads, Industry Guide Program, What is Going On In Atlanta, Job Seekers Workshop, etc.
Monday, February 4 MARKETING PLAN
Identify the elements, source, construct and model.
Monday, February 11 THE INTERNET
How the Internet can help you get your job!How the Internet can be used as a Job Search tool and a research tool to locate information on available job openings.
Monday, February 18 THE RESUME
Preparing and Evaluating Your Resume - Bring A Copy! What types of resumes work best for different backgrounds and jobs? Have your resume reviewed and critiqued.
Monday, February 25 SELLING YOURSELF
Improving Your Sales Skills! Learn how to develop an effective elevator speech. Learn how to script your calls to get results.
Volunteers, who are available to help you in your job search, network with you in your Industry . CareerCare supports ALL those who are in career transition either through unemployment, misemployment, or a desire to change their present situation.
Contact: mailto:mike%40lang.net or 678-642-3727 (C) for information.CareerCare Ministry Web Site: http://www.transfiguration.com/ministry_careercare.htm
Thank You and God Bless
Michael J. Lang (Mike)770-993-4474 (H)678-642-3727 (C)
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
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3:03 PM
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Labels: Events
More Job Search Advice and Resume Review
Here is a link to an event on Monday, Jan 4:
http://finance.groups.yahoo.com/group/TheRuthieList/message/17761
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
at
2:40 PM
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Labels: Events
Networking and Resume Writing
Johnson Ferry Baptist Church Crossroads CareerR Ministry will be hosting our
monthly Network Meeting, on
Monday February 4th, from 7-9 pm. (3rd floor Loft A) Please make plans to
attend this event if you are actively looking for a job or considering a job
change.
Our featured speaker is Martha Lanier. Her topic is "Seize the Moment".
She will cover creating a plan, overcoming self-limiting barriers and
believing in the ability to achieve extraordinary results. Resumes reviews by professional recruiters from 6:15-7pm-see you there!
No rsvp required. For directions - call JFBC church line 770 973-6561
For info on other Crossroads programs, please contact us at 770 565-0854,
ext. 3015 or
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
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2:27 PM
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Labels: Events
February
The rumor mill is, of course, churning that layoffs are scheduled for sometime from the middle to end of this month. If they occur, and for any of you who may be impacted by such an event, please check out the links on the right hand side, and read the older posts. Please be aware that if your resume is posted on Careerbuilder or Monster and you are currently employed you should classify it as private.
Otherwise the fact that you are updating information and searching for a job is clearly visible to your current employer. Also, DO NOT, conduct a job search from work. Conducting a job search from work will entitle your employer to terminate you for cause, no warning necessary. With existing economic conditions, every employee who can be terminated for cause is less of a financial burden for the company. Severance is not paid when someone is terminated for cause.
http://jobsearch.about.com/od/sampleresumes/a/sampleresume2.htm
In older posts DBM offers resume and job search assistance for $150 for sixty days.
Another contact recommended Randy Levy for resume writing. She charges $250 and comes highly recommended although I do not have personal experience working with her. I will need to locate her contact information if you need it.
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
at
11:56 AM
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Labels: General Wieland Information
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
Monster.com Job Fairs in Atlanta
Atlanta Job Fairs
Atlanta Marriott Northwest
200 Interstate North Parkway, Atlanta, GA 30339
Monday, February 4, 2008
Thursday, April 3, 2008
Thursday, June 26, 2008
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
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7:50 AM
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Labels: Events
Tuesday, January 29, 2008
Behavioral Interviewing used in Phone Screens and Face to Face Interviews
SHRM Home > HR News
1/28/08 4:00 PM
Behavioral Interviewing Popular, but Training in Use Urged
By Kathy Gurchiek
Use of behavioral interviewing is on the rise, according to a new survey, but employers are cautioned to identify and define crucial competencies and train interviewers in their use if they want positive results.
More than half (55.7 percent) of 2,556 senior HR professionals and training and development executives surveyed plan to continue using behavioral interviewing at the same frequency, and almost one-fourth (24.7 percent) plan to use it more often, according to a national survey the Novations Group conducted in December 2007.
Behavioral interviewing is a technique aimed at predicting a job candidate’s suitability for a position based on his or her past workplace behavior.
“The interviewer asks the candidate to describe, in detail, how he or she handled specific situations in the past,” Novations executive consultant Tim Vigue said in a press release.
“The answers enable the hiring manager to learn the candidates’ capacity to handle similar situations in the new position.”
The sharp rise in the hiring technique may be attributable in part to what Vigue says is “an increasingly diverse talent pool” that demands that organizations hire the best candidate “from the broadest possible pool.” That requires, he said, using “objective methods that won’t screen out qualified candidates due to bias.”
However, for behavioral interviewing to be effective, the employer must identify and define a short list of the competencies and behaviors considered crucial for the position, and have people who are trained in the technique administering the questions, Vigue noted.
What Is Behavioral Interviewing?
“Behavioral interviewing” is a term that is tossed around loosely, observed Mark Stewart, who has a Ph.D. in industrial psychology and sits on the Society for Human Resource Management’s Organizational Development Special Expertise Panel.
He was skeptical that the 55.7 percent who said they use behavioral interviewing all adhere to the same standards for conducting those interviews.
It’s a technique that goes beyond including some questions about how a job candidate handled various work situations at a former employer, he said. It requires the interviewer to have been trained in spotting the strong answers for the competencies in question and knowing how to score those answers, Stewart said.
“The key in behavioral interviewing is that it has to be structured, [with] set questions that are delivered to every candidate in the same wording, the same order and scored in the same way,” he said in a SHRM Online interview.
For example, the main interview question would be followed up with questions structured to elicit the candidate’s actions and thinking; the outcome of the action taken; what he or she learned from the experience; and how he or she applied the lessons learned at a later date.
The interviewer records any negative or positive themes evident from the candidate’s answers—such as a lack of timely response to customer issues, or handling difficult customers comfortably.
“Ideally, the head of HR works with operational executives to determine the competencies or knowledge, skills and abilities needed to [execute] corporate strategy,” Stewart said in a follow-up e-mail.
“After executives reach consensus, HR must create methods to measure these competencies, educate organizational members on the process and potential value, and work with these people to fully implement the process,” as well as maintain records on the interview program’s use and effectiveness, he wrote.
Stewart, a senior consultant for PCI Human Resource Consulting Inc., in Pittsburgh, advised employers interested in using behavioral interviews to:
• Train the interviewers in its use.
• Use a system that checks that the persons not only received the training but all displayed some degree of accuracy.
• Follow up with the employees after they completed training.
• Involve the hiring manager, who should be familiar with and trained in the process.
• Demonstrate that the interview questions used three or four years ago remain representative of those positions.
Behavioral interviewing can be used in any industry but might be too expensive a process for low-level applicants, Stewart said.
The best way to use the technique, he said, is further along in the selection process, after screening the resume and conducting some type of online inventory. Interviewers can conduct phone interviews that incorporate behavioral interview questions and can conduct in-person behavioral interviews with the final candidates. It’s a way to keep the cost down and the quality of hires up, he said.
“Improving the interview quality is a never-ending process. Predicting performance potential is an art; it’s always sketchy,” he said. The interview answers, he added, “should be viewed as a piece of the data, not the complete picture.”
Kathy Gurchiek is associate editor for HR News.
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
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4:09 PM
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Labels: Interviewing
Monday, January 28, 2008
Tax Returns Free and Refunds Quicker
Remember your job search expenses may be tax deductible, see prior information from Tracy Lee Yates.
If your adjusted gross income was $54,000 or less in 2007, you can use Free File to prepare and e-file your taxes online. You will also receive your refund faster.
http://www.irs.gov/efile/article/0,,id=118986,00.html
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
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4:09 PM
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Labels: Tax Deductions for Job Search
Residential Home Sales news
Excerpt from article:
The Commerce Department reported Monday that sales of new homes dropped by 26.4 percent last year to 774,000. That marked the worst sales year on record, surpassing the old mark of a 23.1 percent plunge in 1980.
The government reported that the median price of a new home barely budged last year, edging up a slight 0.2 percent to $246,900, the poorest showing since prices fell by 2.4 percent during the 1991 housing downturn.
The new report reinforced the view that housing is currently undergoing its worst downturn in more than two decades, with the slump threatening to surpass in some ways the severe housing recession of the early 1980s
Link to full article: http://biz.yahoo.com/ap/080128/economy.html?.v=10
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
at
1:36 PM
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Labels: General Wieland Information
Saturday, January 26, 2008
Links to articles of interest from Wall Street Journal
There is information on the main blog page regarding Behavioral Interviewing. This article from WSJ highlights the rise in this approach to interviewing candidates. Please do additional research on the web to help identify role play questions and walk in prepared!
Today's News
Interview Trends
More than three-quarters of roughly 2,500 human-resources executives polled recently said their firms conduct behavioral interviews, using questions like: "Describe a time when you. dealt with a particularly difficult customer." The survey, from global consultancy Novations Group, also shows that nearly a quarter of respondents plan to use the technique more often.
Links from WSJ:
WSJ Virtual Career Fair
http://www.wsj-classified.com/vcf/
Networking
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118704955586296589.html?mod=CarJMain_howcanwehelp
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
at
11:17 AM
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Labels: WSJ Article
Friday, January 25, 2008
Support for those in transition
Dear North Atlanta Family,
If you are experiencing job loss or a career transition, please join us as we kick-off our new North Atlanta Jobs Ministry! The initial meeting will be held Sunday, January 27, from 11:45 a.m. to 12:45 p.m in the Hebrews Coffee Shop in the Family Enrichment Center.
Our goal is to provide spiritual and emotional support as well as encouragement for those in need. Our initial topic will be dealing with the emotional aspects of job loss or a career transition. We are pleased to have Dr. Major Boglin, Director of the Genesis Center, as our presenter on the topic.
Subsequent meetings will be held on the 3rd Sunday of each month. Please plan to attend!
For more information, or to volunteer to assist in this ministry, please contact Steve Pratt at 770-814-9627 or Ken Vaughn at 770-597-9840.
http://www.nacofc.org/
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
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7:22 PM
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Labels: Events, Faith based
Thursday, January 24, 2008
Tax appraisal for your home may be too high
Once again from Clark Howard:
Jan 17, 2008 -- Hints for appealing your property tax reappraisal
A lot of us got a lump of coal from our own government this past year. Your home may have gone down in value in 2007 and may continue to do so this year. But talk about rubbing salt into the wounds; people are getting property tax reappraisals that are way up from where they were before. The Washington Post reports that Maryland residents are seeing property tax increases of 33 percent, yet property values are down in much of the state. This scenario is being repeated all over the country. The appraisals are out of date and use faulty data from boom-year sales. The net effect is that your local government is ripping you off. There's no other way to say it. Do you have to take it? No, you can appeal your appraisal. The rules for appeal vary by jurisdiction. There may be an informal process before the formal one. Never gripe about the government during the process, just present the facts about recent sale prices of homes similar to yours. These figures, often called "comps" in real-estate lingo, are the smoking gun that will help you get an appraisal price rollback. Search out comps on the Internet or consult a local real-estate agent for help. If you can get comps for foreclosures in your neighborhood, that's like having extra ammunition. Clark suggests dressing business casual if you have to appear before a panel as part of the process. The idea is to dress nicely -- but not too well -- and people will respond to your appearance
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
at
10:15 PM
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Labels: Tax Deductions for Job Search
Cheap and Free from Clark Howard - Love this guy!
Variety of cheap and free links, hope you find one that helps:
http://clarkhoward.com/topics/free_and_cheap.html
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
at
10:06 PM
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Labels: Clark Howard Links
Great way to network and help others
A lot of you have the skills to really help and get in some networking at the same time :).
http://clarkhoward.com/liveweb/forms/habitat-volunteer-registration4/
This is a link to a Habitat Build through Clark Howard.
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
at
10:03 PM
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Labels: Clark Howard Links, Networking
Work at home
This link is to a Clark Howard article recommending legitimate work at home companies:
http://clarkhoward.com/topics/workathome_help.html
Posted by
Elizabeth Coggins
at
9:58 PM
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Labels: Alternative to traditional employment, Clark Howard Links